The Electromagnetic Nature of Gravity and Inertia
Date: 2011-11-12 Time: 07:00 - 09:00 US/Pacific (1 decade 3 years ago)
America/Los Angeles: 2011-11-12 07:00 (DST)
America/New York: 2011-11-12 10:00 (DST)
America/Sao Paulo: 2011-11-12 11:00
Europe/London: 2011-11-12 14:00
Asia/Colombo: 2011-11-12 19:30
Australia/Sydney: 2011-11-13 01:00 (DST)
Where: Online Video Conference
Recording Playback
This video conference used Fuzemeeting.
The meeting can be replayed by clicking this link:
https://www.fuzemeeting.com/replay_meeting/fccff073/2207101
This video conference used Fuzemeeting.
The meeting can be replayed by clicking this link:
https://www.fuzemeeting.com/replay_meeting/fccff073/2207101
Description
The writer brings to light the supposedly well-known fact that vectors of attractive forces of magnets and electrostatic charges are linear and repulsive forces are tangential. The writer asserted that as the consequence of this fact, the attraction between opposite polarities (of magnets and electrostatic charges) and repulsion between same polarities is not equal due to the different geometry of the field, and therefore different density of the field between two (or more) charges (magnets). The writer assumed that this asymmetry actually can account for gravitation. That would bring possibility that gravitation can belong to the family of electromagnetic forces. The writer also elaborates on the idea of possibility of electromagnetic origin of inertia, brought in by late Prof. William (Bill) Hughes from the University of South Dakota. The consequence would be an inherence and independence of inertia, in accordance with Newton?s views.